Humour
Humour or humor (Greek: Χιούμορ) is the way that some experiences can make people laugh or feel happy. Most people are able to be amused (laugh or smile at something funny) and have a sense of humor. You can use puns with words that sound similar but have different meanings, or a word that has two meanings.[1] Other examples of humor are satire, saying yes or no when it is not expected, and using different kinds of logic. People of different ages and cultures can find different things humorous.[1] For example, adults may like satire, which children could find hard to understand.[2][3] A comedian is someone who is paid to make people laugh. Humor is describing things in a funny way, having the ability to make the jokes.
Humour Media
Muhammad al-Baqir's Hadith about humour: "Indeed Allah loves those who are playful among people without obscenity."
Humour can be a way of dealing with the menacing or unpleasant: Sprayed comment below a memorial plaque for Alois Alzheimer who first described the memory-damaging Alzheimer's disease – the German text means "Alois, we will never forget you!"
Boris Yeltsin and Bill Clinton enjoying a joke, in spite of their language differences
A person working in a retail store wearing a large pair of pants in an attempt to amuse those around them
Surprise is a component of humour.
An exaggerating caricature of Oscar Wilde by James McNeill Whistler
Related pages
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Tony Veale, Kurt Feyaerts, Geert Brone (2006). "The Cognitive Mechanisms of Adversarial Humor" (PDF). Humor International Journal of Humor Research. 19 (3): 305–339. doi:10.1515/HUMOR.2006.016. S2CID 1821223. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-21. Retrieved 2010-12-27.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ↑ Seth Benedict Graham A cultural analysis of the Russo-Soviet Anekdot Archived 2013-01-16 at the Wayback Machine 2003 p.13
- ↑ Bakhtin, Mikhail. Rabelais and His World [1941, 1965]. Trans. Hélène Iswolsky. Bloomington: Indiana University Press